David Blockley is an engineer and academic scientist. He has been Head of the Department of Civil Engineering and Dean of the Faculty of Engineering at the University of Bristol. He is a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering and the Royal Society of Arts.
Math has never been my strongest subject and this was a great primer for me. This book covers a lot of the theories, concepts, and scientific aspects of structural engineering without relying too heavily on mathematical formulas (which likely would have lost me). If you work in or around structural engineers and want to have a better understanding of the field then this is the book for you. I'd also recommend this book to people considering going to school for structural engineering so they could get a better idea of it before committing.
Exactly what the title says. Good intro to a topic that’s new to me. Easy to understand. I laughed when he said the blocks “want” to move. Even us dummies know blocks don’t want to do anything.
Structural engineering is such an integral and vital aspect of all other types of engineering, that Structural Engineering: A Very Short Introduction serves as a good introduction to engineering in general. Author David Blockley achieves a good balance of simplicity without dumbing his discussion down, mainly through the use of "thought experiments" to illustrate his points. He also ends each chapter with a restating of the main points of that chapter. Other popularizers of science and engineering should take note.